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The System of Financial Supervision in Europe – Origin, Developments and Risk of Overruling

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 January 2017

Abstract

The article depicts the general framework in which the regulatory bodies in financial sector have been operating. After an introductory outline of the financial system and its objectives, the analysis shifts to the framework of the financial business operators and of the regulatory bodies. The market is organised and fragmented in financial conglomerates, where cross activities take place and where potentially it is easier for the regulatory bodies to exercise their control. In this context, the different models of supervision will be scrutinised, together with the attempts, made at European level, to comply with the international standards. The final part is dedicated to the description of global dynamics and to the current situation to overcome the systemic crisis affecting the market. With some –bitter – concluding remarks we will try to prospect possible different solutions to the crisis, solutions that don't necessarily coincide with the actual decisions to reform the system taken at European level.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2011

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References

1 Parts of the following analysis are an updated version of Chapter II, Margherita Poto, Financial Supervision in Comparative Perspective (Intersentia, Antwerpen-Oxford-Portland, 2010), at pp. 29–48.

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12 Karel Lannoo, “Supervising the European Financial System”, supra note 11, at p. 234: “A Leviatan supervisor could create the perception that the whole financial sector is secure. It may reduce the incentives for providers to prudently manage their business, and for users to carefully choose their financial services’ provider, the so called moral hazard”.

13 Ibid., at p. 231: “It has been argued that the crucial thing is not whether all the functional supervisors are under a single roof, but whether they communicate with one another. This is not a simple task, if one images that the British FSA employs about 2000 persons. If an integrated supervisor is no more than a combination of banking, insurance and investment business divisions, the full benefits of a single regulatory authority will not be achieved”.

14 Tommaso Padoa Schioppa, “Securities and banking: bridges and walls”, Lecture at the London School of Economics, London, 21 January 2002, available on the Internet at <http://www.ecb.int> (last accessed on 21 October 2011).

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16 Ibid., at p. 455.

17 Rainer Nickel, European Governance and European Administrative Law: New Legal Benchmarks for the New European Public Order, EUI Working Papers, Law No 2006/26.

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22 While writing the article, the whole package on financial regulation and supervision has been adopted and published in OJ L331/1, December 15, 2010; see in particular Regulation 1092/2010/EU, Regulation 1093/2010/EU, Regulation 1095/2010/EU and Regulation 1096/2010/EU all adopted on November 24, 2010.

23 Niamh Moloney, The Lamfalussy legislative model: a new era for the EC securities and investment services regime, in International and Comparative Law Quarterly (2003), at p. 509.

24 Ibid., at p. 518.

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27 Michael S. Barr and Geoffrey P. Miller, Global Administrative Law: The View from Basel, European Journal of International Law (2006), at p. 17.

28 Ibid., at p. 18.

29 Ibid., at p. 27: “The Basel Committee has become more accountable over time. The process resulting in the Capital Accords of 1988 were characterized by closed meetings with little or no transparency. Negotiations were conducted without public input, and the final rule was announced […] as a ‘fait accompli’. Domestic implementation in the United States and in the European Union accrued without much additional process. But by time of negotiations over the second accord, Basel, had begun to open up, in part as a response to financial institution pressure for greater transparency and in part because of substantive concerns with first accord had helped to galvanize a debate over new global rules”.

30 Isaac, William M., “Somebody Must stop the Runaway Train Basel II”, American Banker (2005), at p. 2A Google Scholar.

31 For further details, see the Internet at <http://www.bis.org/publ/bcbs134.htm> (last accessed on 21 October 2011).

32 Available on the Internet at <http://www.consilium.europa.eu/> (last accessed on 21 October 2011). For the updates see supra note 22.

33 On the reform see Jean-Claude Trichet, “Macro-prudential oversight and the future European Systemic Risk Board”, Keynote address by Mr Jean-Claude Trichet, President of the European Central Bank at the European Banking Congress, Frankfurt am Main, 19 November 2010, available on the Internet at <http://bis.org/review/r101126b.pdf> (last accessed on 21 October 2011).

34 See Onado, Mario, “Is the Larosière Proposal on European Financial Regulation on the Right Path?”, in 45(1) The International Spectator, (March 2010), pp. 5973 CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

35 In December 2010 all the Basel rules texts and results have been published, in this occasion it has been planned that all major G-20 financial centers commit to have adopted the Basel III Capital Framework by 2011. Available on the Internet at <http://www.bis.org> (last accessed on 21 October 2011).

36 Juvenal Satires VI 347-348: “pone seram, cohibes. sed quis custodiet ipsos custodes?”

37 In this regard, Jean- Claude Trichet compared the systemic risk to the wood of the English proverb. “You can't see the wood, if you are too focused on the trees.” See Clare Distinguished Lecture in Economics and Public Policy by Jean-Claude Trichet, President of the ECB organised by the Clare College, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, 10 December 2009, available on the Internet at <http://www.ecb.int/press/key/date/2009/html/sp091210_1.en.html> (last accessed on 21 October 2011).

38 Kindleberger, Charles P., Manias, Panics, and Crashes: A History of Financial Crises (Wiley, 2005), 5th editionCrossRefGoogle Scholar.

39 See Mario Onado, supra note 34, at p. 68.